Lake Tahoe as a canvas

I think I finally figured out how to work with water as a colored texture. I like the idea of textures, but I wanted the water color. The key was to select just the subject from the photo you want to paste onto the texture. For the pinecone I did this with freehand select using my digital pad and pen. For the bush I used select by color, copy, paste, as many times as I could stand. I was okay with a little bit of an abstract bush. It’s not all filled in, but that allows more water to come through.

The pine cone was very small! I put it on a post to photograph it. I should have changed off my telephoto lens, but I managed to clean up the slight blur on the cone afterwards by using sharpen. The bush is from the East side of the Sierra, growing at around 5,500 feet above sea level. (Lake Tahoe is 6,000.)

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Flowers

The experiment with the mist did not turn out at all! But the macros are coming along. A little. Mostly it’s just about the light for me. But after I shot these, after not being able to make any manual adjustments, my husband showed me how to adjust things on the camera. Combined with Laurie’s artistic suggestions I’m looking forward to controlling my next macros manually.

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Color

I was awed by the black and white photos on Leanne Cole’s and Laura Macky’s Monochromatic Madness series. So what did I do but go out and get drunk on color.

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I was also talking to Leanne Cole today about preferences for the original photo versus a photo with actions applied.  You can take a look at her before-and-after images here.

Here is a straight photo followed by an oil painting rendition. Not the same as an “Action” but kind of the same idea. I’m trying to decide which I like more. Which do you like more?

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